Seeds Germination Guide: Complete Step-by-Step Process
Successful seed germination is the foundation of every productive garden. Understanding what seeds need to sprout — and what can go wrong — is the single most valuable skill a home gardener can develop. This complete step-by-step germination guide covers everything from seed preparation to transplanting, tailored for Indian growing conditions.
What Seeds Need to Germinate
Every seed needs four things to germinate successfully:
- Moisture — to activate enzymes and soften the seed coat
- Warmth — most vegetable seeds germinate best at 25–30°C
- Oxygen — seeds need air; waterlogged soil prevents germination
- Darkness or light — most seeds germinate in darkness; some (like lettuce and hydrangea) need light
Step-by-Step Germination Process
Step 1: Prepare Your Seeds
- Check viability — test old seeds with the damp paper towel method before sowing
- Pre-soak large seeds — soak gourd, bean, pea, and beet seeds in warm water for 12–24 hours
- Scarify hard seeds — lightly sand the seed coat of Morning Glory and similar hard-coated seeds
- Chill stratify if needed — some flower seeds need cold treatment; refrigerate in damp paper for 2–4 weeks
Step 2: Prepare Your Growing Medium
- Use seed-starting mix — not garden soil (too heavy and may contain pathogens)
- Ideal mix: 50% cocopeat + 30% vermicompost + 20% perlite
- Moisten the mix before filling containers — it should be damp but not dripping
- Fill seed trays or small pots to within 1 cm of the top
Step 3: Sow Seeds
| Seed Size | Sowing Depth | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Very fine (dust-like) | Surface only; press gently | Hydrangea, Petunia, Lettuce |
| Small | 0.5 cm | Tomato, Brinjal, Chilli, Kale |
| Medium | 1–1.5 cm | Cucumber, Squash, Coriander |
| Large | 2–3 cm | Beans, Peas, Gourds, Corn |
Step 4: Maintain Germination Conditions
- Cover seed trays with clear plastic or a humidity dome to retain moisture
- Place in a warm location — top of refrigerator, near a water heater, or in a warm room
- Check daily — mist if surface appears dry; remove cover once seeds sprout
- Do not overwater — the most common cause of germination failure
Step 5: Care for Seedlings
- Move to bright light immediately after germination — seedlings need 6+ hours of light
- Thin overcrowded seedlings — snip (don’t pull) weaker seedlings to avoid disturbing roots
- Begin feeding at 2 weeks — dilute liquid fertiliser at quarter strength
- Harden off before transplanting — gradually expose to outdoor conditions over 7–10 days
Germination Times for Common Indian Garden Seeds
| Seed | Germination Time | Optimal Temperature |
|---|---|---|
| Tomato | 5–7 days | 25–30°C |
| Chilli / Capsicum | 7–14 days | 25–30°C |
| Brinjal | 7–10 days | 25–30°C |
| Kale / Broccoli | 5–7 days | 18–25°C |
| Coriander | 7–14 days | 20–25°C |
| Bitter gourd / Ash gourd | 5–7 days | 28–35°C |
| Morning Glory | 5–7 days | 25–30°C |
| Hydrangea | 14–21 days | 18–22°C |
Troubleshooting Germination Problems
| Problem | Likely Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| No germination after 3 weeks | Old seeds, wrong temperature, or too dry/wet | Test seed viability; adjust conditions |
| Seedlings fall over (damping off) | Fungal disease from overwatering | Improve drainage; reduce watering; use fresh mix |
| Leggy, stretched seedlings | Insufficient light | Move to brighter location or add grow light |
| Yellowing seedlings | Nutrient deficiency or overwatering | Begin feeding; check drainage |
Related Bloom & Grow Guides
- Vegetable Seeds Guide for Home Gardening
- Heirloom Seeds — Benefits & Uses Guide
- Backyard Kitchen Gardening — Complete India Guide
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why do my seeds germinate but seedlings die quickly?
This is usually damping off — a fungal disease caused by overwatering and poor air circulation. Use fresh seed-starting mix, water from below, and ensure good ventilation.
Q: Can I germinate seeds directly in garden soil?
Yes, for direct-sown crops like coriander, beans, and gourds. For transplanted crops like tomato and brinjal, seed-starting mix gives much better results.
Q: How do I know if my seeds are too old to germinate?
Do the paper towel test: place 10 seeds on a damp paper towel, fold, and keep warm for the expected germination period. If fewer than 5 sprout, the seeds have low viability.
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